FiddlerJohn said:
Thanks to
rokeby for posting Craig Vetter's
really Cool little video.
You're welcome...
And thank you for the iMiEV video.
As much as I like both videos, I think that they are both fatally flawed as
far as being a valid demonstrations. I can think of three of three objections
without serious effort:
1. The diameter of the tube is far too small. There is a near certainty that flow
and pressure waves from the model are reacting with the walls of the tube.
I suspect to minimize such effects the tube would need to be ~6" in diameter.
2. The model car is moving backwards and it's wheels are rotating backwards.
In full size wind tunnels tests are conducted with one of three conditions:
a. car stationary, wheels not rotating.
b. car stationary, wheels rotating on rollers
c. car held stationary over a moving ground plane (think conveyor belt), wheels
rotating.
I've never read of a full size test with the wheels going backwards. The
backwards spinning wheels are going to be throwing/pulling air up in front
of the wheel... quite simply, not right.
3. You can scale down the car and the wind tunnel, but you can't scale down
the air molecules. What might be a relatively large radius curve on a full size car
is a tight radius on the model. Granted, F1 designers do use models, but IIRC they
are 1:4 scale, not 1:64. You can't scale air viscosity or momentum for the models.
So, they're fun little videos, but they leave a lot to be desired as far as rigor goes.
I wouldn't bet the farm on the i having similar Cd (drag) going both forward and
backwards. And other than as a theoretical discussion, it isn't meaningful...
unless you can find a way to reverse the i's body on its chassis!